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Dive into the research topics where Andrew F. DeBlase is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew F. DeBlase.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

Characterization of Highly Unusual NH+–O Hydrogen Bonding to Ester Ether Oxygen Atoms through Spectroscopic and Computational Studies

Michael T. Scerba; Andrew F. DeBlase; Steven Bloom; Travis Dudding; Mark A. Johnson; Thomas Lectka

We characterize a highly unusual, charged NH-O hydrogen bond formed within esters of 8-(dimethylamino)naphthalen-1-ol in which an ammonium ion serves as an intramolecular hydrogen bond donor to spatially proximate ester ether oxygen atoms. Infrared spectroscopic analysis of the ester carbonyl frequencies demonstrates significant blue-shifting when ether hydrogen bonding is possible, in stark contrast to the more commonly observed red shift that occurs upon hydrogen bonding to the ester carbonyl oxygen. The intrinsic behavior of the linkage (i.e., in which counterions and solvent effects are eliminated) is provided by vibrational predissociation spectroscopy of the isolated gas-phase cations complexed with weakly bound D(2) molecules.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2008

A Valence Bond Study of Three-Center Four-Electron π Bonding: Electronegativity vs Electroneutrality†

Andrew F. DeBlase; Megan Licata; John Morrison Galbraith

Three-center four-electron (3c4e) pi bonding systems analogous to that of the ozone molecule have been studied using modern valence bond theory. Molecules studied herein consist of combinations of first row atoms C, N, and O with the addition of H atoms where appropriate in order to preserve the 3c4e pi system. Breathing orbital valence bond (BOVB) calculations were preformed at the B3LYP/6-31G**-optimized geometries in order to determine structural weights, pi charge distributions, resonance energies, and pi bond energies. It is found that the most weighted VB structure depends on atomic electronegativity and charge distribution, with electronegativity as the dominant factor. By nature, these systems are delocalized, and therefore, resonance energy is the main contributor to pi bond energies. Molecules with a single dominant VB structure have low resonance energies and therefore low pi bond energies.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2015

Diffuse Vibrational Signature of a Single Proton Embedded in the Oxalate Scaffold, HO2CCO2–

Conrad T. Wolke; Andrew F. DeBlase; Christopher M. Leavitt; Anne B. McCoy; Mark A. Johnson

To understand how the D2d oxalate scaffold (C2O4)(2-) distorts upon capture of a proton, we report the vibrational spectra of the cryogenically cooled HO2CCO2(-) anion and its deuterated isotopologue DO2CCO2(-). The transitions associated with the skeletal vibrations and OH bending modes are sharp and are well described by inclusion of cubic terms in the normal mode expansion of the potential surface through an extended Fermi resonance analysis. The ground state structure features a five-membered ring with an asymmetric intramolecular proton bond. The spectral signatures of the hydrogen stretches, on the contrary, are surprisingly diffuse, and this behavior is not anticipated by the extended Fermi scheme. We trace the diffuse bands to very strong couplings between the high-frequency OH-stretch and the low-frequency COH bends as well as heavy particle skeletal deformations. A simple vibrationally adiabatic model recovers this breadth of oscillator strength as a 0 K analogue of the motional broadening commonly used to explain the diffuse spectra of H-bonded systems at elevated temperatures, but where these displacements arise from the configurations present at the vibrational zero-point level.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014

On the character of the cyclic ionic H-bond in cryogenically cooled deprotonated cysteine

Andrew F. DeBlase; Steven R. Kass; Mark A. Johnson

The gas phase structure of deprotonated cysteine (Cys-H(+))(-) has recently gained attention because of its counterintuitive calculated minimum energy structure in which it appears that deprotonation occurs at the -SH moiety rather than at the nominally more acidic carboxylic acid group. Because previous experimental efforts have not yielded to a consensus regarding the structure of the anion, we report the cryogenic ion vibrational predissociation (CIVP) spectra of its cryogenically cooled H/D isotopologues in an effort to clarify the situation. The unexpected isotope dependence of key features in the spectrum and the similarity of the band pattern to that displayed by the intramolecular H-bonded linkage in a deprotonated diacid (HCO2(CH2)10CO2(-)) indicate that the dominant form of the anion occurs with a strongly shared proton between the thiolate (-S(-)) and carboxylate (-CO2(-)) groups. An interesting aspect of this (-S(-)···H(+)···(-)O2C-) linkage is that, although the global minimum places the shared proton closer to the oxygen atom, the soft potential energy curve calculated for displacement of the bridging proton would likely support sufficient zero-point motion both to blur the distinction between thiolate- and carboxylate-based structures and to account for the unusual isotope effects.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2012

Structural characterization of electron-induced proton transfer in the formic acid dimer anion, (HCOOH)2-, with vibrational and photoelectron spectroscopies.

Helen K. Gerardi; Andrew F. DeBlase; Christopher M. Leavitt; Xiaoge Su; Kenneth D. Jordan; Anne B. McCoy; Mark A. Johnson

The (HCOOH)(2) anion, formed by electron attachment to the formic acid dimer (FA(2)), is an archetypal system for exploring the mechanics of the electron-induced proton transfer motif that is purported to occur when neutral nucleic acid base-pairs accommodate an excess electron [K. Aflatooni, G. A. Gallup, and P. D. Burrow, J. Phys. Chem. A 102, 6205 (1998); J. H. Hendricks, S. A. Lyapustina, H. L. de Clercq, J. T. Snodgrass, and K. H. Bowen, J. Chem Phys. 104, 7788 (1996); C. Desfrancois, H. Abdoul-Carime, and J. P. Schermann, ibid. 104, 7792 (1996)]. The FA(2) anion and several of its H∕D isotopologues were isolated in the gas phase and characterized using Ar-tagged vibrational predissociation and electron autodetachment spectroscopies. The photoelectron spectrum of the FA(2) anion was also recorded using velocity-map imaging. The resulting spectroscopic information verifies the equilibrium FA(2)(-) geometry predicted by theory which features a symmetrical, double H-bonded bridge effectively linking together constituents that most closely resemble the formate ion and a dihydroxymethyl radical. The spectroscopic signatures of this ion were analyzed with the aid of calculated anharmonic vibrational band patterns.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2016

Alkali Cation Chelation in Cold β-O-4 Tetralignol Complexes.

Andrew F. DeBlase; Eric T. Dziekonski; John R. Hopkins; Nicole L. Burke; Huaming Sheng; Hilkka I. Kenttämaa; Scott A. McLuckey; Timothy S. Zwier

We employ cold ion spectroscopy (UV action and IR-UV double resonance) in the gas phase to unravel the qualitative structural elements of G-type alkali metal cationized (X = Li(+), Na(+), K(+)) tetralignol complexes connected by β-O-4 linkages. The conformation-specific spectroscopy reveals a variety of conformers, each containing distinct infrared spectra in the OH stretching region, building on recent studies of the neutral and alkali metal cationized β-O-4 dimers. The alkali metal ion is discovered to bind in penta-coordinate pockets to ether and OH groups involving at least two of the three β-O-4 linkages. Different binding sites are distinguished from one another by the number of M(+)···OH···O interactions present in the binding pocket, leading to characteristic IR transitions appearing below 3550 cm(-1). This interaction is mitigated in the major conformer of the K(+) adduct, demonstrating a clear impact of the size of the charge center on the three-dimensional structure of the tetramer.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2018

Infrared Population Transfer Spectroscopy of Cryo-Cooled Ions: Quantitative Tests of the Effects of Collisional Cooling on the Room Temperature Conformer Populations

Christopher Harrilal; Andrew F. DeBlase; Joshua L. Fischer; John Lawler; Scott A. McLuckey; Timothy S. Zwier

The single-conformation spectroscopy and infrared-induced conformational isomerization of a model protonated pentapeptide [YGPAA + H]+ is studied under cryo-cooled conditions in the gas phase. Building on recent results ( DeBlase , A. F. ; J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2017 , 139 , 5481 - 5493 ), firm assignments are established for the presence of two conformer families with distinct infrared and ultraviolet spectra, using IR-UV depletion spectroscopy. Families (A and B) share a similar structure near the N-terminus but differ in the way that the C-terminal COOH group configures itself (cis versus trans) in forming H-bonds with the peptide backbone. Infrared population transfer (IR-PT) spectroscopy is used to study the IR-induced conformational isomerization following single-conformer infrared excitation. IR-induced isomerization is accomplished in both directions (A → B and B → A) in the hydride stretch region and is used to determine fractional abundances for the two conformer families (FA = 0.65 ± 0.04, FB = 0.35 ± 0.04, 2σ error bars). The time scale for collisional cooling of the room-temperature ions to Tvib = 10 K by cold helium in the octupole trap is established as 1.0 ms. Key stationary points on the isomerization potential energy surface are calculated at the DFT B3LYP/6-31+G(d) G3DBJ level of theory. Using RRKM theory, the energy-dependent isomerization rates and populations are calculated as a function of energy. According to the model, the observed population distribution after collisional cooling is close to that of the 298 K Boltzmann distribution and is in near-quantitative agreement with experiment. On the basis of this success, inferences are drawn for the circumstances that govern the population distribution in the trap, concluding that, in ions the size of [YGPAA + H]+ and larger, the observed distributions will be near those at 298 K.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017

Preparation of labile Ni+(cyclam) cations in the gas phase using electron-transfer reduction through ion–ion recombination in an ion trap and structural characterization with vibrational spectroscopy

Musleh Uddin Munshi; Stephanie M. Craig; Giel Berden; Jonathan Martens; Andrew F. DeBlase; David J. Foreman; Scott A. McLuckey; Jos Oomens; Mark A. Johnson

Gas-phase ion chemistry methods that capture and characterize the degree of activation of small molecules in the active sites of homogeneous catalysts form a powerful new tool to unravel how ligand environments affect reactivity. A key roadblock in this development, however, is the ability to generate the fragile metal oxidation states that are essential for catalytic activity. Here we demonstrate the preparation of the key Ni(I) center in the widely used cyclam scaffold using ion-ion recombination as a gas-phase alternative to electrochemical reduction. The singly charged Ni+(cyclam) coordination complex is generated by electron transfer from fluoranthene and azobenzene anions to doubly charged Ni2+(cyclam), using the electron-transfer dissociation protocol in a commercial quadrupole ion trap instrument and in a custom-built octopole RF ion trap. The successful preparation of the Ni+(cyclam) cation is verified through analysis of its vibrational spectrum obtained using the infrared free electron laser FELIX.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2015

The 70th International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy.

Andrew F. DeBlase; Jonathan A. Maner; Antonio D. Brathwaite

F June 22 to 26, 2015, spectroscopists from over 25 countries were warmly welcomed to the University of Illinois at Urbana−Champaign (UIUC) by Provost Ilesanmi Adesida, for the 70th International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy (ISMS). Prof. Benjamin J. McCall, Birgit McCall, and the UIUC team are commended for their outstanding organization and implementation of the meeting program. Also, the Coblenz Society and The Journal of Physical Chemistry A are acknowledged for their support of the barbeque. This report summarizes the presentations of the plenary speakers and award recipients mentioned in Table 1, as well as a few memorable talks from the mini-symposia. An exhaustive list of presenters and abstracts can be found on the conference Web site: isms.illinois.edu.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2011

Unraveling the Anomalous Solvatochromic Response of the Formate Ion Vibrational Spectrum: An Infrared, Ar-Tagging Study of the HCO2-, DCO2-, and HCO2-center dot H2O Ions

Helen K. Gerardi; Andrew F. DeBlase; Xiaoge Su; Kenneth D. Jordan; Anne B. McCoy; Mark A. Johnson

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Thomas Lectka

Johns Hopkins University

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Anne B. McCoy

University of Washington

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